News (Media Awareness Project) - UK GE: PUB LTE: Honouring The War Dead |
Title: | UK GE: PUB LTE: Honouring The War Dead |
Published On: | 1998-06-08 |
Source: | Evening News (Norwich UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 08:44:10 |
HONOURING THE WAR DEAD
In your opinion column (June 4) "Forget such a foolish tribute" you say it
is "crass" to lay wreaths at a war memorial to memorialise the dead and
living -dead victims of the drug war.
I must disagree.
What is crass is to have my parents' generation fight a war against German
fascism in the name of freedom, only to have the governments of the western
democracies turned into fascist police state - which would make Hitler beam
with pride - over the bogeyman of "drugs".
What is crass is to arrest 641,000 Americans last year for violation of
cannabis prohibition, a nd build Americas prison population to over 1.7
million, most of whom are prohibition victims.
While the phrase "drug war" started out as a cheap political metaphor, it is
no longer so.
This is a "real" war with real casualties, but it is not, as it is sometimes
represented, a war "on drugs". It is, like all wars, a war against people.
It is a war against people of the US, the people of the UK and, indeed, now
a war against all peoples of the world, by all the governments of the world.
Those who languish in the prison camps operated by the perpetrators of this
war (not to mention those killed in its atrocious battles) are just as much
prisoners of war as any killed by German or Japanese fascists 50 years ago.
The horror and the injustice of their captivity is just as real. Their
physical suffering just as real.
So it is "entirely appropriate" for those of us with enough sense, decency
and compassion to oppose this bloody war to lay wreaths to honour its many
victims anywhere and everywhere where they will be noticed.
And it is also entirely appropriate for us to invoke the spirit and goodwill
of those who were told they were fighting in an earlier era to defeat
fascism and make the world safe for individual freedom.
Patrick L Lilly, Colorado Springs USA
Checked-by: Melodi Cornett
In your opinion column (June 4) "Forget such a foolish tribute" you say it
is "crass" to lay wreaths at a war memorial to memorialise the dead and
living -dead victims of the drug war.
I must disagree.
What is crass is to have my parents' generation fight a war against German
fascism in the name of freedom, only to have the governments of the western
democracies turned into fascist police state - which would make Hitler beam
with pride - over the bogeyman of "drugs".
What is crass is to arrest 641,000 Americans last year for violation of
cannabis prohibition, a nd build Americas prison population to over 1.7
million, most of whom are prohibition victims.
While the phrase "drug war" started out as a cheap political metaphor, it is
no longer so.
This is a "real" war with real casualties, but it is not, as it is sometimes
represented, a war "on drugs". It is, like all wars, a war against people.
It is a war against people of the US, the people of the UK and, indeed, now
a war against all peoples of the world, by all the governments of the world.
Those who languish in the prison camps operated by the perpetrators of this
war (not to mention those killed in its atrocious battles) are just as much
prisoners of war as any killed by German or Japanese fascists 50 years ago.
The horror and the injustice of their captivity is just as real. Their
physical suffering just as real.
So it is "entirely appropriate" for those of us with enough sense, decency
and compassion to oppose this bloody war to lay wreaths to honour its many
victims anywhere and everywhere where they will be noticed.
And it is also entirely appropriate for us to invoke the spirit and goodwill
of those who were told they were fighting in an earlier era to defeat
fascism and make the world safe for individual freedom.
Patrick L Lilly, Colorado Springs USA
Checked-by: Melodi Cornett
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